While recognizing the authorship of the New Testament Scripture, the Jews don't believe they need a Saviour. They don't recognize being saved or the born-again experience as we Christians do. They believe they are God's elect by being born under covenant with their father Abraham and keeping the Law of Moses keeps them in relationship with God.
The apostle Paul discusses this in his epistles and tells us that "all of Israel will be saved." This comes in the future during the Great Tribulation when the wrath of God falls on the earth and Israel becomes the focal point of that wrath that brings them to Christ.
This brings us to "the double purpose of God's wrath" during the Great Tribulation. While the Lord is dealing with unbelief in many different ways with the Gentiles on this earth, He is dealing separately with His chosen, Israel in the same wrath. This is the subject of the book of Revelation, with the purpose of fulfilling the promises in the Old Testament of the restoration of Israel to and above it's former glory. God had promised Abraham that he and his descendants through the birthright of Isaac would inherit an "everlasting possession" of land in the Kingdom.
Beginning in Rev. 6 through 19 is "the Day of the Lord" which means the day of God's wrath. It's not a single day but an event that takes place on this earth with a "double purpose." Everything that takes place in Rev. 6-19 is the Day of the Lord, an extended period of time of God's divine judgment on this earth for 7 years that ends at the Second Coming of Christ when "all of Israel is saved."
The apostle Paul discusses this in his epistles and tells us that "all of Israel will be saved." This comes in the future during the Great Tribulation when the wrath of God falls on the earth and Israel becomes the focal point of that wrath that brings them to Christ.
This brings us to "the double purpose of God's wrath" during the Great Tribulation. While the Lord is dealing with unbelief in many different ways with the Gentiles on this earth, He is dealing separately with His chosen, Israel in the same wrath. This is the subject of the book of Revelation, with the purpose of fulfilling the promises in the Old Testament of the restoration of Israel to and above it's former glory. God had promised Abraham that he and his descendants through the birthright of Isaac would inherit an "everlasting possession" of land in the Kingdom.
Beginning in Rev. 6 through 19 is "the Day of the Lord" which means the day of God's wrath. It's not a single day but an event that takes place on this earth with a "double purpose." Everything that takes place in Rev. 6-19 is the Day of the Lord, an extended period of time of God's divine judgment on this earth for 7 years that ends at the Second Coming of Christ when "all of Israel is saved."